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1. Claytor Hydroelectric Project- Fish Entrainment and Impingement Study (FERC No. 739)
2. Normandeau Associates Employee-Owned Natural Resource Consulting Firm
13 Offices & 35 Years of Experience
Hydropower, Energy, Transportation, Coastal & Marine, Ports & Waterways, Water Resources, Geoscience, Ecological, Hazardous Waste Sites
3. Normandeau Associates Professional Expertise (150 Reg. Employees)
Fisheries Scientists and Biologists
Limnologists
Hydrogeologists
Wetland scientists
Ornithologists
Wildlife biologists
Taxonomists (Macroinvertebrate & Fish Larvae)
SCUBA divers
Engineers
4. Project Team Normandeau Associates, Inc.
Mr. Douglas Royer, Project Manager
Dr. Dilip Mathur, Technical Director
Mr. Terry Euston, Senior Scientist
Dr. Matthew Chan, ADP Coordinator
Mr. Jeff Wollis, Field Crew Leader
Interactive Oceanographics
Mr. Tom Opishinski - ADP Expert Advisor
5. Objectives Evaluate the likelihood of entrainment, impingement, and turbine mortality for juvenile and adult life stages of fish species in Claytor Reservoir
Species of interest
striped bass
largemouth bass
smallmouth bass
white bass
spotted bass
hybrid striped bass
gizzard shad
walleye
alewife
black crappie
bluegill
7. Entrainment, Impingement, and Turbine Mortality Factors Size and depth of intakes
Water velocity at intake entrance
Intake location relative to fish habitat
Characteristics of fisheries populations
Number and size of individuals
Fish Behavior (migratory, preferred habitat)
Characteristics of Turbine Units
Turbine Type
Size
Number of blades
Spacing of blades
Turbine Speed
Water pressure (penstock, turbine or tailwater)
Reservoir water levels
8. Primary Tasks Literature review of swim speeds/behavior for juveniles and adults stages of target species
Review evidence of any I&E problems associated with current operations
Literature review and comparative analysis of I&E problems reported for similar projects
Measure intake velocity fields during maximum hydraulic capacities and compare velocities against swim speeds
Qualitative and quantitative analysis
9. Methods by Task 1. Literature searches: EPRI database, include published science articles, grey literature, reports submitted to FERC and internet sources.
2. Review evidence of any impingement and entrainment problems, accomplished by requesting information from AEP, including reports of problems, reviewing any past studies, obtaining any letters from agencies or the public, talking with operators, etc...
10. Methods by Task (cont’d) 3. Identify and review studies at projects of similar design
Literature search, primarily grey literature, and any published literature
Review information on project characteristics and fish fauna
Request quantitative information as needed
11. Methods by Task (cont’d) Estimate intake and bar rack velocities
Field survey of intake velocities will be made with a boat mounted Sontek Acoustic Doppler Profiler (ADP)
Safety concerns may alter the exact method of deployment, but it will use an ADP
Velocities at bar racks will be provided by AEP based on engineering analysis
Direct comparison of velocities and swim speeds
12. Intake Velocity Survey
13. Intake Velocity Survey
14. Methods by Task (cont’d) 5. Estimate Turbine Mortality using predictive models.
15. Literature Based Survival Use a developed database of all available turbine passage survival studies then culled by:
Study characteristics
Station characteristics
Species
16. Literature Based Survival: Study Characteristics Established mark-recapture techniques
Adequate control groups, reasonable recapture rates, assumption testing
Completeness of data
Turbine and station characteristics, species data, etc.
Control mortality =50%, sample size (N) >25
Statistically based studies with validity of assumptions testing
Professional judgment
17. Literature Based Survival: Station Characteristics
18. Literature Based Survival: Target species
Similar species or families
Fish lengths
Heisey et al. (1996) – size more important than species
Typically three size classes for Entrainment Density per EPRI 1997
Typically four size classes for mean Survival per EPRI 1997
19. Example of Survival Using Predictive Models Franke et al. (1997)
Based on VonRaben model (Bell 1981)
Example for three turbine types
Kaplan
Propeller
Francis
Example for six fish lengths
20. Francis Model S = 1 – P
21. Parameters P = probability of strike
l = strike mortality correlation factor
N = number of turbine runner blades
L = fish length
D = maximum turbine runner diameter
aa = angle to axial of absolute flow upstream of turbine runner
Qwd = discharge coefficient (Q/wD3)
w = rotational speed (rpm x 2p/60)
R = turbine runner radius
r = turbine runner radius at point fish enters turbine
S = survival probability
22. Assignment of Survival Estimates Quantitative estimates
Derived from field study
Basis for qualitative descriptors
Qualitative descriptors
High
Moderate High
Moderate
Low Moderate
Low
23. Results – Previous Studies Sites included in analysis
24. Example Station A – Avg. survival rates (%) observed at other sites for target/similar species. Number of studies in parentheses.
25. Example- Combined Qualitative and QuantitativeEstimate at Example Station A
26. Schedule